* Any views expressed in this article are those of the author and not of Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Assets that kill don’t make for good investments

In an age of mistrust there’s good reason the voice of the healthcare community continues to carry weight. Research published this week by The Lancet medical academic journal showing the health impacts of climate change deserve attention.

We should listen when told that climate change is an issue of public health as much as it’s about the health of our planet. They show how our continued reliance on coal is costing lives through air pollution while also driving climate change that will prove damaging to public health in so many ways. This is a poor return from a killer investment.

Analysis included in the research by The Lancet Countdown on Health and Climate Climate, the research collaboration behind the research, shows air pollution from coal plants is responsible for over 1.6 million premature deaths across India, China, Indonesia, South Korea and Japan each year. This figure is for just one type of air pollution attributed to coal and the overall total is likely to be even higher. That isn’t what I would call cheap energy.

No more warnings should be needed for the finance sector to exit the coal industry given its role in air pollution and a widescale public health disaster. When my doctor tells me something is bad for my health I tend to listen. It’s due time the finance sector now listens to the warnings about a whole sector.

Fortunately, investors and utilities are moving capital and shifting portfolios towards genuinely clean energy like solar and wind power. As the Lancet report highlights, the global solution is a worldwide coal phase out as coal plants cause 44% of global CO2 emissions. We’ve already seen institutional investors rush to drop coal in large part due to its poor financial performance but increasingly also based on pollution and its devastating effects on public health.

Assets that kill don’t make for good investments. Moreover, the Lancet Countdown report adds even greater weight to the body of expert opinion that the coal industry is facing long-term structural decline.

The insurance giant Axa has also exited coal. When the world’s largest insurers start divesting from coal, you know the industry is in serious trouble.

The US$80 billion we have under management is just a small slice of the US$1.24 trillion investor equity to have turned its back on this filthy fuel. This increasingly also includes health sector funds as fossil fuel industries harms their members.

As the Lancet highlights, whilst coal is phased out of the energy system, in particular in electricity production, the rapid scaling up of zero-carbon energy production and use will be crucial. Critical renewable technologies for achieving this will be solar, wind and other safe renewables sources like geothermal.

Another remarkable new example of the shift from dirty coal energy to solar and wind is South Korea. President Moon Jae-in is charting a path which other Asian economies are watching closely as the Government seeks to clear the smoggy skies by shutting down dirty coal plants and other sensible measures.

This gives hope in boosting the economy with high returns from both domestic and overseas investments in clean energy infrastructure, which are making billions.

There are hopeful signs from Asia to the Americas - transitioning to clean energy saves lives and avoids financial losses from dying industries.

Jan Erik Saugestad is the CEO Storebrand Asset Management. Storebrand is the largest private pension in Norway with over US$80 billion assets under management, second only in size to the trillion dollar Norwegian government pension fund. The company launched their Plus fund concept in 2016 and recently added a new fossil free fund to it in April 2017. Now Storebrand has total fossil fuel-free funds valued at over US$1.6 billion, a figure which is set to rise. The rate of return on these fossil free investment has been 19%.